HomeBaby Names DirectoryErnesto

Ernesto

♂ Boy

Pronounced er-NES-toh /ɛrˈnɛs.toʊ/High

Meaning: Spanish and Italian form of Ernest, from Old High German Ernust meaning seriousness, vigor, or battle to the death; implying earnest determinationHigh

In 30 seconds: Ernesto is the Spanish and Italian form of Ernest, a Germanic name meaning seriousness or earnest resolve, that has been a distinguished name across the Spanish-speaking world and is carried by many notable historical and cultural figures.
💕 Browse more names
Origin HighGermanic, Italian, Spanish
MeaningSpanish and Italian form of Ernest, from Old High German Ernust meaning seriousness, vigor, or battle to the death; implying earnest determination
U.S. rank (2025)#878 ↗ Rising
2025 U.S. births272 boys (0.01% of U.S. boys)
Peak year2003
Total births (all-time)≈ 44,689

Popularity in the U.S. · SSA data

peak 200318892025

U.S. births per year (Social Security Administration, 1880–present). Pink marker = peak year.

History & Origin

Ernesto is the Romance-language adaptation of the Germanic name Ernest, which derives from Old High German Ernust, meaning earnestness, vigor, or a fight to the death. The Germanic tribes used the word to convey absolute seriousness of purpose. The name entered the Romance languages via medieval contact and became established in Spain and Italy, where it has been used for centuries. It was particularly fashionable among aristocratic and bourgeois families in the 19th and early 20th centuries.

In the Spanish-speaking world Ernesto remains a dignified, classic name. Its most prominent 20th-century bearer, Ernesto Guevara de la Serna (known as Che Guevara), gave it a revolutionary association, though the name predates and transcends that connection. In the United States Ernesto is well-established in Latino communities and has occasionally crossed over into broader usage. The English cousin Ernest gained wit through Oscar Wilde's 1895 comedy, which punned on the homophone earnest.

Did you know? The most famous Ernesto in modern history may be Ernesto Che Guevara, but the name also belongs to Nobel Prize-winning author Ernest Hemingway — the English form — and playwright Oscar Wilde, who titled his masterpiece The Importance of Being Earnest as a pun on the name's meaning.
Overall data confidence 93%
Behind the Name — Ernesto — etymology and variant formsDiccionario de nombres propios (RAE) — Spanish onomastic tradition

Variations

ErnestErnstArnesto

Nicknames

ErnieNesto

Famous Bearers

  • Ernesto Che Guevara (1928–1967)
    Argentine Marxist revolutionary and guerrilla leader who played a key role in the Cuban Revolution and became a global symbol of rebellion.
  • Ernesto Sabato (1911–2011)
    Argentine novelist and intellectual, best known for his psychological novels On Heroes and Tombs and The Tunnel.

If you like Ernesto…

Lorenzo— three-syllable Spanish and Italian classic name with the same dignified Romance feel
Roberto— Spanish and Italian form of Robert with matching three-syllable elegance
Sergio— classic Spanish-Italian masculine name with a similar strong, cultivated sound
Valentino— Italian classic name sharing Ernesto's Romance heritage and vintage gravitas

Frequently Asked

What does the name Ernesto mean?

Ernesto comes from Old High German Ernust meaning earnestness or vigor; it implies serious determination.

How do you pronounce Ernesto?

It is said er-NES-toh — three syllables with stress on the second.

Is Ernesto Spanish or Italian?

Ernesto is used in both Spanish and Italian as the equivalent of the English name Ernest.

What is a nickname for Ernesto?

Common nicknames include Ernie and Nesto.